Are climate meets worth slash & burn?

Brazil, host of COP30, is reportedly clearing sections of the Amazon to build a highway for the eco-conference. This decision has faced criticism for its environmental impact, overshadowing the summit's purpose of addressing climate change. The hi...

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The annual global climate summits - often hosted in exciting places - are already slammed for being grand melas that achieve little beyond adding more emissions to an overheating planet. Now, there's a sweet twist of irony. Brazil, host of COP30, scheduled to take place in November, is, according to reports, razing chunks of the lush green Amazon to build a four-lane highway so that global leaders, think tankers, business leaders and other climate busybodies can glide smoothly in and out of the eco-conference. The government, as all governments tend to do, has defended the project, saying it - if words could kill - is an important 'mobility intervention' and that it is a 'sustainable highway'. Well, well.... The project, a little birdie revealed, was proposed over a decade ago and repeatedly delayed due to environmental concerns. Slap a green label on anything and it magically becomes eco-friendly. Tell us about it!

This road isn't just a path through the Amazon - it's a metaphor for what COP has become: a circus of grand speeches, lofty promises and no money to save places like the Amazon rainforests. Well, the Brazilian president is right: this will be a COP 'in the Amazon, not about the Amazon'. If subtlety could kill.... Hope COP31 doesn't learn from this and hold the conference on a freshly drained wetland.
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Business News › Opinion › Just in Jest › Are climate meets worth slash & burn?
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